The Guardian (USA)

A message to Starmer from the US: ditching your £28bn climate plan isn’t just cowardly – it’s bad politics

- Kate Aronoff

It’s hard, from the US, to feel all that confident about the state of our climate policies. The Inflation Reduction Act – the Biden White House’s trademark legislativ­e achievemen­t, which revolved around green investment­s – was a major accomplish­ment. Still, the US is breaking new records for its production and export of fossil fuels, last year extracting more oil and gas than ever before. Even more worrying is just how tenuous the country’s modest progress on the climate feels in advance of November’s presidenti­al election: Donald Trump continues to lead Joe Biden in just about every poll.

However, at the very least, the Biden administra­tion has set a bar for the scale of green investment that centre-left parties should undertake. The same can’t be said of the Labour party, which has reportedly now scrapped its laudable £28bn green spending pledge in favour of some bizarre fealty to its leadership’s own strange idea of fiscal responsibi­lity. So what can Labour learn from the Democratic president’s approach?

To his great credit, Biden took seriously the need to win over progressiv­e supporters of his main opponent in the Democratic primary in 2020. Bernie Sanders was an early adopter of the climate movement’s calls for a “green new deal”, laying out an expansive $16tn plan to tackle global heating and inequality. Biden’s $3.5tn Build Back Better agenda, produced with

Sanders and his supporters in consultati­ve roles, was decidedly not a green new deal. It did, however, reflect that platform’s most valuable components, positing climate action as a job creator and driver of 21st-century economic dynamism. Inherent in that was a willingnes­s to spend lots of money, fast, on the things that matter.

Almost as soon as Biden took office, however, climate advocates in the US watched the White House’s already too modest jobs and climate agenda get whittled down to what eventually became the Inflation Reduction Act’s roughly $400bn in new spending on climate and environmen­tal priorities. It’s a shamefully slender programme, given how wealthy the US is, and its outsized historical responsibi­lity for the climate crisis. But it’s also the best we might have hoped for, given the political influence of a fossil fuel industry that’s captured the Republican party virtually wholesale, along with key Democrats such as the West Virginia senator, Joe Manchin.

Without the idiosyncra­sies that

weakened US climate policy, why do some members of the Labour party seem so keen to negotiate against themselves? The party’s £28bn a year green prosperity plan has now been dropped, thanks to the political cowardice of people such as the shadow chancellor, Rachel Reeves, who was already distancing herself from the policy in an interview with LBCearlier­this week. The Labour veteran and podcast host Ed Balls suggested the problem with the plan was the number attached to it – urging Starmer and Reeves to “Uturn” away from it, so as to project fiscal responsibi­lity and deflect repeated attacks from the right that Starmer would raise taxes to fund it. The party establishm­ent is clearly spooked by the spectre of rightwing attacks, as Labour’s latest move so clearly shows.

If the US can offer any lessons about how to deal with a right wing yammering on about how green policies allegedly hurt “ordinary people” while preaching painful austerity, it’s that it won’t give you a lick of credit for giving in to its ideas. Neither, moreover, will voters. The planet is even less forgiving. The costs of the climate crisis far outweigh the costs of acting on it. Under present policies, the climate crisis could cost the UK 3.3% of GDP a year by 2050. By 2100, that jumps to 7.4% of GDP a year; in today’s terms, that would be about £168bn.

Labour needn’t look to the future, though, to make a straightfo­rward case for going big on green spending. The Conservati­ves’ long-running war on good climate policy has already made life more expensive for working-class Britons. David Cameron’s bid to cut the “green crap” entailed doing away with a successful home insulation programme in 2013. And the average household could be paying gas bills of up to £400 lower if the Tories hadn’t axed the energy price guarantee scheme.

While Labour’s green prosperity plan was designed with the Inflation Reduction Act in mind, there was an opportunit­y for Starmer to improve on it by emphasisin­g the short-term benefits, such as the money households could save from national home insulation projects. Though it’s a hot topic among wonkish types in the US, UK and other parts of Europe, very few people here could tell you what the Inflation Reduction Act actually is. As of last August – a year on from the act’s passage – 71% of US residents said they knew “little or nothing” about it. Why is the White House’s high-profile accomplish­ment so far from most Americans’ minds? For one, the consultanc­y McKinsey has found that $216bn of the act’s $394bn in climate and energy-related tax credits will flow to corporatio­ns. Meanwhile, many benefits, such as incentives for pricey items such as electric vehicles and solar panels, are completely inaccessib­le to lower-income people and renters, who account for about 36% of US households.

Driving investment in low-carbon energy and technologi­es makes a lot of sense: green industries grew four times faster than the rest of the British economy in 2020-21. But courtingpr­ivatesecto­r investment in green industries above all else – a sadly salient critique of the Inflation Reduction Act – threatens to leave voters in the dark about the benefits of climate action to their pockets. An active green industrial strategy should go hand in hand with an expansion of the public goods, services and planning capacities it will need to succeed. Upgrading public transit infrastruc­ture and ensuring an abundant, affordable supply of low-carbon energy will be key to the success of the emerging green industries. More important, though, is that these can be the foundation on which Labour – should it ever choose to –builds both a broadly shared green prosperity and its electoral mandate for ever-stronger climate policies.

The last few years of climate policymaki­ng in the US point to at least one clear conclusion: Reeves and those who pushed to kill Labour’s green spending pledge are dead wrong. Labour should be sparing no expense on reducing emissions and improving livelihood­s; if anything, £28bn a year is much too little. If party top brass can summon even an ounce of political courage they’ll make another U-turn away from disastrous, outdated economic orthodoxy and revive their more ambitious climate plans. Should that happen, the party can make voters acutely aware of the choice before them – to live a good, green life under Labour, or to let another Tory government take away more of their hard-earned money. Otherwise, the difference­s between Tory and Labour rule will keep getting harder and harder to spot.

Kate Aronoff is a staff writer at the New Republic, a fellow at the Roosevelt Institute and the author of Overheated: How Capitalism Broke the Planet – And How We Fight Back

 ?? Photograph: Murdo MacLeod/The Guardian ?? Keir Starmer, Rachel Reeves and Ed Miliband at the launch of Labour’s policy for all-green electricit­y by 2030 on 19 June 2023, Edinburgh.
Photograph: Murdo MacLeod/The Guardian Keir Starmer, Rachel Reeves and Ed Miliband at the launch of Labour’s policy for all-green electricit­y by 2030 on 19 June 2023, Edinburgh.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States